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CONCORDIA THEOLOGICAL MONTHL Y Vol. XXXI JUNE 1960 No.6 Editorial Comment 340 Scripture and Tradition in the Council of Trent. RICHARD BAEPLER 341 The Sixteenth-Century "Confessyon of the Payth of the Germaynes" in Twentieth-Century American English. HERBERT J. A. BOUMAN 363 "But Right or Wrong-My Architecture." GEORGE W. HOYER 371 HOMILETICS 379 THEOLOGICAL OBSERVER 387 BOOK RINIEW 391 EDITORIAL COMMITTEE VICTOR BARTLING, PAUL M. BRETSCHER RICHARD R. CAEMMERER, MARTIN H. FRANZMANN ALFRED O. FUERBRINGER, ARTHUR CARL PIEPKORN WALTER R. ROEHRS,· LEWIS W. SPITZ GILBERT A. THIELE • On leave of absence AddreJI aU commlmications to the Editorial Committee in care of Victor Bartling, 801 De Mun Ave., St. Louis 5, Mo. THEOLOGICAL OBSERVER BRIEF ITEMS Porto Alegre, Brazil.-"Lutheran churches in Latin America are growing in stature, in­creasing in momentum," and exhibiting "evi­dence of maturity and mission," the Lutheran World Federation Executive Committee heard at its meeting here. The director of the L WF Committee on Latin America, Dr. Stewart W. Herman of New York, said in his report that "statistical figures indicated a baptized membership of nearly 900,000 -although the number of pastors is not keeping pace with the need, let alone the opportunities, which face us." Dr. Herman also listed a number of "sig­nificant developments (which) may be pointed out as the harbingers of new depar­tures into very promising directions." They were: -meetings of considerable consequence ... between the various Lutheran theological faculties in South America, located at Jose C. Paz and Villa Ballester, Argentina, and at Sao Leopoldo and Porto Alegre, Brazil; the cultivation of . . . relations on a country-by-country basis among Lutheran groups until now kept apart by divergent synodical traditions or national origins; the discerning management of, and contribution to, revolving loan funds which Lutheran churches of various countries make available to groups in Latin America for such purposes as buying church sites and erecting buildings on them; -greater participation in specific ecu­menical projects; -the waxing readiness to join forces in mission work; , -the renewed attention to the production of Lutheran literature, currently highlighted by the completion of a new hymnal and service book and a pastor's service book, both in Spanish, and by plans to begin work on a $60,000 edition of Luther's works in the same language; and 387 recent efforts to work toward a broad social service program. Dr. Herman said the Latin American com­mittee was "heartily grateful for the fact that the meeting to which this account is sub­mitted is occurring on Latin American soil." Latin America, he added, "may thus be seen to contain an increasingly important part of the woddwide Church of the Ref­ormation." This was the first time in L WF history that its Executive Committee met in the Western Hemisphere, outside the United States. Numerous leaders of Latin American churches attended as invited observers. The Latin America committee itself was scheduled to meet in Porto Alegre in the two days immediately following the Execu­tive Committee sessions. Porto Alegre, Brazil. -How the Lutheran World Federation's new "research professor" plans to begin his first task of providing Protestants with a fresh evaluation of mod­ern Roman Catholic doctrine and practice was detailed here. In its report to the meeting of the L WF Executive Committee, the federation's Special Commission on Interconfessional Research included a statement of what Prof. K. E. Skydsgaard, on leave from the University of Copenhagen, will be doing under its guidance during the next few years. Text of the statement follows: During the coming years Professor Skyds­gaard will concentrate his study primarily on Roman Catholicism as it appears in con­temporary theology and church life. He will plan to publish a book outlining contempo­rary Roman Catholicism which would be a study of the controversial problems which are especially discussed in the theology of the Reformation. Within this framework Professor Skyds­gaard will use some time for studying the 388 OBSERVER problem of Scripture and tradition, especially in view of recent developments in Mariology and other problems. Since he is also the chairman of the Commission on Tradition and Traditions in the Commission on Faith and Order of the World Council of Churches, Professor Skydsgaard's contribution will at this point also be of specific importance for ecumenical work. Since Roman Catholicism is a complexity of theological and practical problems, it should also be studied at the very places where Roman Catholic piety has its expres­sions. Therefore Professor Skydsgaard plans to travel to important Roman Catholic cen­ters, which will include a visit to Rome. He will enlarge his experience through personal contacts and will also give some specific con­sideration to the Pope's plans to cal! an "ecumenical" council. The commission has also given special at­tention to the problems which arise on the mission field where Roman Catholicism is using a method which very often irritates the non-Roman churches. It has been the com­mission's hope that Professor Skydsgaard may even have the opportunity of becoming ac­quainted with the problems here involved through co-operation with the Commission on World Mission. Next summer Professor Skydsgaard is plan­ning to hold a small seminar mainly for graduate students from Scandinavian countries in order to study the important decisions of the Tridentine (Trent) Council. During the follow-up he hopes to continue such seminars on a broader international level. It was felt of primary interest that Professor Skyds­gaard's abilities should be used for the in­struction of younger theologians who could then contribute to this important work. It is Professor Skydsgaard's intention to develop a library which would include stand­ard works on Roman Catholicism, especially the encyclopedias, historical and dogmatical studies describing Roman Catholicism. This library will at present be located in the Ecumenical Institute of the University of Copenhagen, of which Professor Skydsgaard is the director. The library will be kept as a separate unit until the final decision is made as to the location of the planned foundation. The foundation referred to is an inde-pendent unit planned to be the ultimate vehicle for the Lutheran program of inter­confessional research. This foundation can­not be established until authorization is ob­tained at the federation's 1963 assembly in Helsinki. Meanwhile the special commission, with official sanction, not only has launched the research program but also is preparing a draft constitution for the foundation itself. It informed the Executive Committee that the document would be ready for presenta­tion at the latter's 1961 meeting. To support Professor Skydsgaard and his research assistant in their prefoundation ac­tivities and to cover the cost of travel for its own meetings, the commission said it would need $25,000 a year from L WF mem­ber churches and national committees. Toward the budget for the program's first year, which began on Feb. 1, it reported that $16,040 had been granted to it by the American, German, and Swedish national committees and the 6,000-member Lutheran Church in Italy. In presenting the commission's report its secretary, Director VHmos Vajta of the LWF Department of Theology, declared that "the support of the member churches and of the Executive Committee itself for this activity is of primary importance for the life of the Lutheran churches throughout the world." His plea for support was reinforced by the commission's chairman, Bishop Herman Dietzfelbinger of Munich, who is head of the Lutheran Church in Bavaria and an Ex­ecutive Committee member. Porto Alegre, Brazil. -Prominent theo­logical scholars representing a wide range of confessional and personal positions on the 16th century Protestant Reformation will gather next August for an international re-OBSERVER 389 search congress convened by the Lutheran Wodd Federation, an L WF official disclosed here. Presenting his report at the meeting of the federation's Executive Committee here, Director Vilmos Vajta of the Department of Theology said invitations have been extended to "all those who have been brought to the attention (of the conveners)." Dr. Vajta said he expected that "all lead­ing personalities in the field of Luther re­search," representing "all shades of theolog­ical opinion," would participate in the con­gress, which is to take place at MUnster, Germany, from Aug. 8 to 13. This will be the second International Congress for Luther Research, the first having been held in Aar­hus, Denmark, in 1956. He explained that although the L WF De­paJ:tment of Theology joined with a con­tinuation committee of the Aarhus congress in issuing the invitations, the federation's connection with the MUnster gathering is "loose" and involves no effort to control "freedom of research." It will be "a research congress for experts with free participation on the part of all those who are connected with research in Luther's theology or the Reformation," Dr. Vajta stressed. Some 100 outstanding scholars are ex­pected to attend. Their discussions will cen­ter in the relations between the Reformer Martin Luther and his leading collaborator, the German humanist Philip Melanchthon, since this year marks the 400th anniversary of the latter's death. "We have succeeded," Dr. Vajta said, "in securing the co-operation of such top-ranking Luther scholars as the following" to read papers at the congress: From the United States, Dr. Theodore G. Tappert, Lutheran Theological Seminary, Philadelphia; Dr. Warren A. Quanbeck, Lu­ther Seminary, St. Paul, Minn.; Dr. Wilhelm Pauck, Union Theological Seminary, New York; Dr. Harold Grimm, Ohio State Uni­versity, Columbus, Ohio. From Sweden, Prof. Herbert Olsson, Uni­versity of Uppsala; the Rev. Peter Fraenkel of Lund. From Germany, Dean Robert Stupperich, University of MUnster; Prof. Rudolf Her­mann, Humboldt University, Berlin; Dr. Os­car Thulin, director of the Luther Hall, Wit­tenberg; Prof. Bernhard Lohse, University of Hamburg. From eastern Europe, Prof. D. Bartel of Warsaw, Poland, and Prof. Jena Solyom of Budapest, Hungary. Other countries expected to be represented among the conference participants include the United Kingdom, Australia, France, In­dia, Japan, and Argentina. Director Stewart W. Herman of the L WF Committee on Latin America said the scholar from Argentina would be Prof. Carlos Witthaus of the Lu­theran Theological Faculty in Jose C. Paz. Other Americans expected to attend in­clude Dr. Conrad Bergendoff, president of Augustana College, Rock Island, Ill.; Dr. Walter Kukkonen and Dr. R. H. Fischer, both of Chicago Lutheran Theological Sem­inary; Dr. Fred W. Meuser, Capital Univer­sity, Columbus, Ohio; Dr. E. Clifford Nel­son, Luther Seminary, St. Paul; and Dr. Ar­nold E. Carlson, Augustana Seminary, Rock Island; Dr. E. G. Schwiebert, Executive Di­rector of the Foundation for Reformation Research, and Dr. Carl S. Meyer, Concordia Seminary, St. Louis. Porto Alegre, Brazil. -Three younger churches -two African and one Asian­were admitted into membership in the Lu­theran World Federation by action of its Executive Committee. Approved by the committee at its annual meeting here, March 20-25, were the 22,000-member Lutheran Church of Central Tanganyika, the 28,000-member Usambara­Digo Lutheran Church in the same country, 390 OBSERVER and the 4,500-member Taiwan Lutheran Church on the island of Formosa. Their acceptance brings the federation's roll of affiliated churches to 64 in 34 coun­tries, representing a combined membership of nearly 50 million of the estimated 71 mil­lion Lutherans in the world. The LWF's Executive Committee deferred action on the membership application of the 113,000-member Evangelical Lutheran Ovambokavango Church of Southwest Af­rica pending further steps by that church body toward full autonomy. An outgrowth of work by the Finnish Missionary Society, the Ovambokavango Church was formally organized in 1954, and at its first assembly in 1958 it voted to seek membership in the LWF. Also approved by the committee was an application for official L WF recognition from a Lutheran congregation in La Paz, Bolivia -the 600-member German-speaking Evangelical Lutheran church. It was the ninth congregation -all in South Amer­ica -accorded such status, which is granted to local Lutheran churches in countries where there is no federation-affiliated church body, to enable them to have a fuller tie with world Lutheranism. The Church of Central Tanganyika is the fruit of labor by missionaries from the Au­gustana Lutheran Church. The church was officially constituted in 1958, and the Au­gustana mission organization is now being integrated into it. The Usambara-Digo Church -like the already L WF-affiliated Lutheran Church of Northern Tanganyika -is located on a mis­sion field in that country originally developed by Germans but now administered under a federation trusteeship by the National Lu­theran Council of the U nired States, with an international staff. Lutherans of other countries took over the work when condi­tions during and after World War II made it impossible for the Germans to con­tinue it. All three African churches are currently headed by foreign missionaries: Ovamboka­vango by a Finn, the Rev. Alpo Hukka, Usambara-Digo by a German, the Rev. Hein­rich Waltenberg of the Bethel Mission, and Central Tanganyika by an American, the Rev. Ruben A. Pedersen. All three, however, are free to choose an African, and one or two will probably do so within a few years. President of the Taiwan Church is a na­tional, the Rev. Peter Chou. This church was developed after the war by the Taiwan Lutheran Mission, a unified agency represent­ing three North American and three Nor­wegian agencies as well as a Danish and a Finnish mission agency. Formal organization of the church took place in 1954. Most of the Lutherans on Taiwan are Chinese who fled from the mainland when the Communists conquered the country. Present constituents of the united mission that was developed there in the early 1950s include the missionary groups from the Evangelical Lutheran, Augustana Lutheran, and Lutheran Free Churches of North America. European mission agencies represented are that of the Norwegian Lutheran Free Church, the Norwegian Lutheran Mission, and the Norwegian, Danish, and Finnish missionary societies. The La Paz congregation is the first Bo­livian group to be recognized by the LWF. Of the congregations previously granted such status, four are in Venezuela, two in Colom­bia, and one each in Ecuador and Peru. The La Paz congregation traces its origin to German Lutheran services started in the Bolivian capital in 1923, although it has had a full-time pastor and a parish council only since 1949. In the 1930s and '40s it was served by pastors from Argentina and Chile, who made periodical visits.